Friday, August 25, 2006

Jobberz Press Release

Jobberz.com Where Everyday People Make Money

For Immediate Release

MICHIGAN, Mich./EWORLDWIRE/8/25/2006--- Tightening budgets compounded by increasing prices related to rising gas costs have made the attraction of additional side job work to supplement regular income an attractive option.

Since its launch earlier this year, Jobberz.com Founder Shawn Hanaee has found the positive reception thrilling to encounter users have shared with him. By offering their skills through Jobberz, would-be workers have been able to locate suitable work that fits into their schedules and offers them a chance to meet rising costs.

After a simple signup process is complete, jobberz can submit their details online and make them available to the public.

"Through direct interaction with colleagues and friends, I found the idea of creating a centralized location for meeting up with potential employers intriguing. With little start-up capital and conservative plans, I've managed to reach across the U.S. with the site and its opportunities - with intensely positive results," said Hanaee.

Although there are a significant number of employment sites, none offer the precision of Jobberz, as a supplement to a regular job. While jobs are posted, additional photos to accompany the posting are offered. Users can see sample work online before they hire or contact anyone.

Those looking for additional side work are invited to submit their jobs online at www.jobberz.com.

Monday, August 21, 2006

thousand jobs

All who were involved in making possible the exciting announcement on Thursday that Alorica, Inc. will create 1,000 jobs at a new technical support center in North Sioux City can take a well-deserved bow.

The news continues a string of positive metro area job announcements made within the last 18 months: Qwest Communications, 450 new jobs in Sioux City; Interbake Foods, 250 new jobs in North Sioux City; Chief Energy Co., 40 new jobs at a planned ethanol plant in Sioux City; Portionables, 100 new jobs in North Sioux City; Gateway, 130 new jobs in North Sioux City; MachineryLink Inc., 100 new jobs in North Sioux City; BPI, 200 new jobs in South Sioux City; and with the opening of Lakeport Commons in Sioux City, some 200 to 300 new jobs became available.

This metro region has fostered a cooperative spirit and a philosophy of what benefits one, benefits all in terms of economic development. The Alorica announcement defines that philosophy. The tech center will be located in North Sioux City, but all of the metro region stands to benefit.

As we said when Qwest and Interbake made their announcements of 700 new jobs in March 2005, many and varied benefits are attached to major private-sector job-creation announcements. First and foremost is the economic value such investments have as workers take the jobs and spend money. Not to be overlooked, though, are ancillary benefits such as the creation of local excitement and optimism and the positive impact these kinds of announcements potentially can have on continuing efforts to land more jobs.

Andy Lee, Alorica's chief executive officer, is a former Gateway executive who spent time at the computer maker's North Sioux City complex. We applaud him for his decision to expand his growing new company in that same community and welcome Alorica to the metro region.

Firm gives at-risk kids jobs as interns

Foresters also boosts Flemingdon Park radio station

Miller acknowledges response slow to his youth training plan
Aug. 21, 2006. 01:00 AM
DONOVAN VINCENT
CITY HALL BUREAU


A Toronto life insurance company has launched an internship program for six young people from Flemingdon Park and is investing $75,000 for a local youth radio station.

The initiatives, by Foresters, are being touted by Mayor David Miller as an employment opportunity that came about through his community safety plan. The plan encourages businesses in the city to create jobs and training for young people, especially those from the city's "priority communities'' areas like Flemingdon Park, which has seen gun violence.

The paid internships, which last four months, were announced last week during an event at the recreation centre, which was attended by Miller, local councillor Jane Pitfield (Ward 26 Don Valley West) and Liberal MPP Kathleen Wynn (Don Valley West).

Toronto businesses have been slow to respond to the mayor's call to hire youths from these communities. Youth One, a campaign in which the Toronto Board of Trade challenged its firms to create 1,000 jobs for the city's at-risk youth by Sept. 1, has only managed to create 82 jobs.

George Mohacsi, CEO of Foresters, which has operated at the corner of Eglinton Ave. E. and Don Mills Rd. for 40 years, defended the small number of interns his firm is hiring, saying his company has supported local schools, supported local Meals on Wheels programs and other initiatives.

"It's a start,'' Mohacsi said.

"We've done a lot of community support. We may not have had an internship program, but we've supported this community centre by supporting the infrastructure, volunteered at local schools ... We're making a big initiative largely due to the mayor's community safety program,'' Mohacsi said.

He didn't disclose the amount the interns would be getting paid.

Miller acknowledged six is a small number, but said it was a step in the right direction.

The money for the radio station, which began operating in January and broadcasts out of a recreation centre in Flemingdon Park to a radius of about 300 metres, will go toward 14 honoraria for youth to get experience in broadcasting, and pay for equipment and other start-up costs. The funds come from an annual charity golf tournament the company runs, plus a corporate contribution.

Saturday, August 12, 2006

Youths still need jobs

UNEMPLOYMENT still remains a major problem for many youths in the country, according to a government officer.

Ministry of Youth, Employment Opportunities and Sports principal youth officer William Naisara said many youths who came to the national youth week celebrations, still highlighted unemployment as the main problem they faced.

Mr Naisara said the problems faced by youths would be taken up to the National Youth Advisory Board, which advised the Minister for Youth.

"The board facilitates a consultative structure that reaches all areas in order to gather information," he said.

Mr Naisara said the board met on a regular basis and advised the Minister for Youth who then took the issues up to the Government.

"Unemployment is still a problem for many youths because obviously many are leaving school every year," said Mr Naisara.

"Many find difficulties in getting jobs because it is hard to find the right job that is relevant to their skills.

"That is a challenge for the ministry but we see it as an opportunity to encourage small and micro enterprise development for income generation purposes."

Mr Naisara said the ministry's 14 youth officers who were each delegated one province to look after carried out training on such ventures.

He said the youth officers had income generation project targets and performance targets to achieve as well. He said the officers weren't just there for the indigenous Fijians but for all members of the community.

He said the ministry had youth employment opportunities projects in Suva for the Central/Eastern division, Lautoka for the Western division and Labasa for the Northern division.

"Counselling services on employment are provided like writing curriculum vitaes, doing job searches and how to attend a job interview," said Mr Naisara.

RadioShack will eliminate more jobs

RadioShack announced plans late Thursday to slash its work force by 400 to 450 people in an effort to reduce overhead and improve its long-term marketplace position, the company said Thursday.

Most of the job cuts will affect positions at RadioShack's Fort Worth, Texas, headquarters.
The exact number of cuts has not been determined but the cuts will include employees at all levels and across various support functions.

RadioShack (NYSE: RSH) said it will notify affected employees in early September.

Earlier this year the electronics retailer announced a turnaround plan designed to lower overhead costs, grow profitable square footage and increase average unit volume.

Since the plan was unveiled in February, RadioShack has closed 480 underperforming stores, consolidated its distribution centers, begun a cost restructuring program and liquidated end-of-life merchandise to make room for a new product assortment. The company also laid off about 300 workers at that time, including employees at its distribution center in Memphis.

The company has more than 6,000 stores nationwide.

Monday, August 07, 2006

Another 93,000 Jobs Disappeared in August

September 5—The day after President George W. Bush announced the U.S. economy is “looking up” and proposed making most of his millionaire tax cuts permanent, the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) confirmed that working families are enduring the worst jobs loss crisis since the Great Depression.



The BLS announced Sept. 5 that the economy shed another 93,000 jobs in August—for a new total of approximately 3.3 million private-sector jobs lost since the president took office.



“Instead of soaking America’s workers with failed economic policies that do not create jobs, that build mountains of debt for our children and destroy our capacity to meet the nation’s needs, the president should rebuild America with investments in what matters most—schools, our health care system and the nation’s crumbling infrastructure,” said AFL-CIO President John J. Sweeney. “That is the only way to create and preserve jobs, restore real economic growth and security for working families and secure the nation.”



With 1.9 million unemployed Americans now looking for work for 27 weeks or longer, unemployment dipped slightly to 6.1 percent or 8.9 million workers, according to the BLS report, down from 6.2 percent in July.


Of the 93,000 jobs lost in August, 44,000 were in manufacturing, the BLS said. That made August the 37th straight month of manufacturing job losses, now totaling nearly 1.9 million manufacturing jobs lost since the recession began in March 2001.

Among the approximately 49,000 service jobs lost in August, some 16,000 were in the information sector while telecommunications shed about 7,000 positions. And professional and business services employment edged down 10,000 jobs in August.

Last week, as new unemployment insurance (UI) claims jumped by 50,000 to 409,000, the highest level since mid-July, the newly jobless had growing reasons to fear they will exhaust those UI benefits before they find new employment.



The percentage of jobless workers who used up their regular UI benefits without finding new work—and therefore need emergency UI benefits—reached 43.8 percent in July, the highest figure on record since 1950. And a recent Federal Reserve Bank of New York report says most recent job losses will be permanent—thanks to the employers’ race to the bottom, sending U.S. jobs to countries where workers enjoy far lower wages and few workplace protections. In addition to the steady hemorrhaging of blue-collar industrial jobs to other countries, research operations, such as Forrester Research Inc., have predicted the loss of 3.3 million white-collar jobs to low-wage countries by 2015.



This year, the months still to come could be bleakest for U.S. workers. The nationally respected outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc. predicted that, based on recent job trends, U.S. employers would announce an additional 399,000 new job cuts during the final four months of 2003.



America’s working families need jobs, not promises, Sweeney said. The Bush administration has predicted its economic policies, including the tax cut package (called the “Jobs and Growth Plan”) that took effect in July, would create 5.5 million jobs by the end of 2004—344,000 jobs each month, starting in July 2003. “The president is already in the hole, with an August jobs deficit of 437,000 promised jobs that did not materialize,” Sweeney said.



To track the administration’s promised job growth, the nonprofit Economic Policy Institute (EPI) launched a JobWatch website. The group said the site will enable the public to better understand if the economy is growing enough to bring down unemployment and raise wages, if job projections are being met and where jobs are growing or going.



“Today’s economy is defined by a seeming contradiction,” said EPI President Lawrence Mishel. “The recession officially ended in November 2001, yet 28 months into this business cycle we are experiencing the largest sustained loss of jobs since the Great Depression.”

US jobs growth weaker than expected

Go to The Sunday Times
Monday, August 7, 2006


US jobs growth weaker than expected
Reuters


Visitors search for job possibilities on the internet at a job centre.US employers added a smaller-than-expected 113,000 new jobs in July and the unemployment rate jumped unexpectedly to 4.8 per cent, Labour Department data showed.


US employers added a smaller-than-expected 113,000 new jobs in July and the unemployment rate jumped unexpectedly to 4.8 per cent, Labour Department data showed.

The report implied softening job markets that may make it easier for Federal Reserve policy-makers to decide to halt in their two-year-long campaign of interest-rate rises when they meet tomorrow.

Though average hourly earnings continued to rise last month, the unemployment rate was the highest since a matching 4.8 per cent in February and was contrary to Wall Street economists' forecasts that the rate would be unchanged from June's 4.6 per cent.

Analysts had also forecast a more robust 142,000 new jobs would be generated in July. The department revised June's new-job total up modestly to 124,000 from a previously reported 121,000 and said that in May 100,000 jobs were created rather than 92,000.

Still, average hourly earnings increased seven cents for a second straight month to £8.82 in July, a 0.4 per cent increase, the same as in June. In the year through July, average hourly earnings rose 3.8 per cent, down slightly from the 3.9 per cent year-over-year gain posted in June.

During July, the number of people looking for work and employed rose more than 200,000, one reason that the unemployment rate was up.

Manufacturing shed 15,000 jobs last month after adding 22,000 in June and goods-producing businesses overall cut 2,000 jobs after adding 23,000 in June.

Friday, August 04, 2006

Chase to Cut 170 Milwaukee Jobs

New York-based JP Morgan Chase and Co. will cut 170 jobs in its Chase Bbank Milwaukee offices by February 2007.

The bank plans to reduce its nationwide collection office cites from five to three. The Wisconsin job cuts will come from the home mortgage and home equity collections areas. The positions will be transferred to Columbus, Ohio; Dallas; and Phoenix.

The collections office located in the Cleveland will also be closed.

The employees whose jobs will be cut may apply for positions at Chase offices in other states. Currently, Chase bank employs 1,400 people in Milwaukee.

AOL to cut 5,000 jobs

NEW YORK — AOL said Thursday it would drop as many as 5,000 employees, or a quarter of its global work force, within six months as the company restructures its business to draw more online advertising dollars.

The announcement came a day after AOL said it would no longer charge high-speed Internet customers for e-mail and other services.

Massive layoffs are expected as AOL stops marketing its dial-up services and reduces its need for customer-support centers.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Pennsylvania lost 7,332 manufacturing jobs in past year

Pennsylvania experienced a slight loss in manufacturing jobs over the past 12 months, according to the new Pennsylvania Manufacturers Register, an industrial guide published annually by Manufacturers' News Inc. of Evanston, Ill. MNI reports Pennsylvania lost 7,332 industrial jobs (less than 1 percent) since July 2005, a moderate loss compared to the 2 percent loss MNI reported in the 12 months prior.

"Hopefully this indicates a slowing, if not a reversal, of the loss of Pennsylvania manufacturing jobs," said Tom Dubin, president of MNI. "Many of the industrial jobs that could be shipped overseas have already moved."

According to Manufacturers' News, Pennsylvania is now home to 19,727 manufacturing companies employing 930,921 workers, ranking it fifth in the nation by number of plants and jobs. Pennsylvania accounts for 30 percent of the mid- Atlantic region's manufacturing jobs and 29 percent of its plants. MNI's survey profiles both large and small Pennsylvania manufacturers, including startup companies with just a few employees.

Philadelphia remains Pennsylvania's industrial leader with 1,220 companies and 59,616 jobs, according to the register. Pittsburgh accounts for 954 companies and 40,351 jobs, while Erie is home to 406 manufacturers and 25,476 jobs. MNI reports all three cities gained plants over the past 12 months.

The state's largest sector by employment is plastic products, representing 41,697 jobs. Commercial printing follows with 29,882 jobs while pharmaceutical preparations account for 23,797 jobs.

Gene Logic to Cut 80 Jobs

GAITHERSBURG, Md. (AP) - Gene Logic Inc., which provides genetic testing services to drug makers, on Tuesday said it will cut about 80 jobs in the restructuring of its genomics division.

The company said the restructuring will result in about $1.5 million in severance and outplacement costs, but will save about more than $8 million per year.
Employees supporting existing products and services for customers will be maintained. The company's preclinical and drug repositioning divisions will not be affected.

The company withdrew its guidance for 2006 and 2007 in June, and announced it would perform a review of its genomics division.

Gene Logic shares rose 4 cents, or 3.3 percent, to close at $1.27 on the Nasdaq.

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